• The IDF dismissed Shalom Eisner from his position. Meanwhile, an IDF document warns soldiers serving in the West Bank to avoid media provocations:

The instruction page, which was obtained by Ynet, urges officers to remember that “the media, and especially the foreign press, is looking for strong images, even provocative, and therefore we must refrain from creating such images unnecessarily.

“Remember that reporters on the field can create a provocation by their very presence or even intentionally in order to incite you to react the way they want you to,” the document stated.

The Jordanians are worried that if they allow a few hundred Palestinians to settle in the kingdom, that would create a precedent and pave the way for 500,000 Palestinians living in Syria to run away to Jordan.

As Jordan’s King Abdullah already has a problem with the 80% Palestinian majority in his kingdom, he does not want the Palestinians in the kingdom.

• Julian Assange’s talk show on the Kremlin-funded Russia Today network kicked off. Special soapbox for Hezbollah’s Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, who offered to mediate a resolution to the Syrian uprising An accused rapist interviews a terror chief, but is this really journalism?

• In an LA Times op-ed, Jordan’s Prince Hassan bin Talal frets that the US will abandon the Mideast.

Rest O’ the Roundup

• Haaretz publisher Amos Schocken explains why his paper gave more prominence to the Japanese tsunami than to the massacre of the Fogel family. It’s A Cold Hierarchy of Importance.

Your an infidel, Julian….which means the Quran says its OK to lie to you. What more can I say!!
Just a whole lot of lies strung together.

Why would this man want a democratic state of Palestinian…jews christians moslems living together, as they are now in Israel….. when their is no democracy in any of the bordering middle eastern countries.